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Melee French Confused Verb Dodgers July Noun May Lay

A melee is a confused and noisy struggle, particularly a hand-to-hand fight involving multiple people, originating from the French word 'mêlée', meaning mixture.

A melee is a confused and noisy fight, especially a hand-to-hand struggle among several people. It comes from the French 'mêlée,' meaning mixture.

Word melee
Date July 29, 2017
Type noun
Syllables MAY-lay
Etymology Fray, donnybrook, brawl, fracas: there are many English words for confused and noisy fights, and in the 17th century melee was thrown into the mix. It comes from the French mêlée, which in turn comes from the Old French meslee, meaning "mixture." Meslee comes from the Old French verb mesler, or medler, which means "to mix." This verb is also the source of medley ("a mixture or hodgepodge") and meddle ("to mix oneself in others' affairs" or "to interfere").
Examples "In a notorious episode in 2000, a fan snatched Dodgers catcher Chad Kreuter's hat as he sat on the bullpen bench, setting off a melee in which Dodgers players and coaches climbed into the stands." — Billy Witz, The New York Times, 8 May 2017

"Police said they are working with the State Department and Secret Service to identify Erdogan guards who they believe instigated the melee." — Tracy Wilkinson, The Baltimore Sun, 18 May 2017
Definition : a confused struggle; especially : a hand-to-hand fight among several people

Tags: wordoftheday::noun

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